Seven Major Sources of Economic Progress - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Seven Major Sources of Economic Progress

Description:

Why are sound institutions, governmental policies and money of stable value important? ... Encourage people to develop their property in ways beneficial to others for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:67
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: tawnihuntf8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Seven Major Sources of Economic Progress


1
Seven Major Sources of Economic Progress
Common Sense Economics James Gwartney, Richard L.
Stroup, and Dwight R. Lee CommonSenseEconomics.com
2
Questions to Consider
  • Capital investments and new technology clearly
    contribute to economic growth and prosperity.
    What else is needed and what can governments add?
  • Why are sound institutions, governmental policies
    and money of stable value important? How can they
    advance economic progress? How can they stifle
    it?
  • Why do economic growth patterns and rates differ
    across countries and time?

3
Source 1
  • Legal System
  • The foundation for economic progress is a legal
    system that protects the private use of land,
    natural resources, labor, capital, and
    entrepreneurial talent in an even-handed manner.

4
The Foundation for Economic Progress
  • Private property rights
  • Private property rights grant the owner of
    property the right to buy, sell, or derive income
    from their land, natural resources, capital and
    entrepreneurial talent.
  • Even-handed enforcement protects these rights to
    exclusive use, protection against abuse, and
    transfer rights, thus allowing property owners to
    focus on resource allocation, efficient
    production, investment, and technological
    advancement.

5
Property Rights
  • Encourage people to use their property
    productively.
  • Promote wise stewardship.
  • Encourage people to develop their property in
    ways beneficial to others for possible exchange,
    transfer or sale.
  • Promote the wise development and conservation of
    resources for the future.

6
The U.S. Will Run Out of Oil! Or Will It?
  • In which year(s) did experts predict that the
    U.S. would run out of oil in the near future?
  • 1914
  • 1926
  • 1970s
  • 2008
  • All of the above

7
Why Have Doomsday Forecasts Been Wrong?
  • When the scarcity of a privately owned resource
    increases, the invisible hand of the market takes
    over and prices rise.
  • Buyers and sellers seek substitutes, discover
    ways to conserve, and innovate!
  • Historically, competitive markets and flexible
    prices spur conservation, substitution, and
    technological advancement.
  • And the sky never falls!

8
Source 2
  • Competitive Markets
  • Competition promotes the efficient use of
    resources and provides a continuous stimulus for
    innovative improvements.

9
Consumers Rule!
  • Competition places pressure on producers to
    operate efficiently.
  • Competition forces businesses to cater to their
    customers preferences and provide goods and
    services for which they are willing to pay prices
    sufficient to cover their costs.
  • Consumers vote with dollars on which businesses
    stay and which must go. (e.g. Target vs.
    Wal-mart vs. Sears vs. K-Mart)
  • They make sure that sole proprietors,
    partnerships and large corporations charge low
    prices, produce quality products and provide
    services of value relative to costs!

10
Source 3
  • Limits on Government Regulation
  • Regulatory policies that reduce trade also retard
    economic progress.

11
Governments Limit Trade and Retard Progress By
  • Limiting entry into some businesses and
    occupations
  • Licensing requirements, completing bureaucratic
    forms, etc.
  • Substituting political authority for rule of law
    and freedom of contract
  • Imprecise, ambiguous and discriminatory laws
    invite people to spend resources on bribery and
    lobbying efforts rather than production.
  • Imposing price controls
  • Price floors and ceilings interfere with trades
    between buyers and sellers, distort prices, and
    lead to inefficient levels of production and
    employment.

12
Source 4
  • An Efficient Capital Market
  • To realize its potential, a nation must have a
    mechanism that channels capital into
    wealth-creating projects.

13
Capital Investment and Its Role in Growth
  • Capital is anything used to produce something
    else and helps us produce more goods and services
    in the future.
  • Machines, buildings, computers, tools
  • Capital investment requires consumption
    sacrifices today. It requires savings. The
    payoff is increased production and consumption in
    the future.
  • A mechanism is needed to channel savings into
    productive investments. Capital markets perform
    this function.

14
Capital Markets
  • Capital markets, broadly defined, include markets
    for
  • Loanable funds, real estate, stock markets
    financial markets
  • Institutions like banks, credit unions and
    investment firms bring savers and investors
    together.
  • Interest rates provide people with incentive to
    save. Productive investments will yield a return
    sufficient to cover all costs, including
    borrowing.
  • Not all investment projects are productive. In a
    world of uncertainty, investments can and do
    fail. But failures hold investors accountable
    and provide them the incentive to discover and
    undertake productive projects.

15
Capital Markets and Government Intervention
  • Governments can and do intervene in capital
    markets by restricting capital movements, setting
    interest rates, and using taxes and budgets to
    allocate capital.
  • These actions
  • Distort market incentives.
  • Increase the importance of political rather than
    economic considerations.
  • Make unproductive investments more likely.

16
Source 5
  • Monetary Stability
  • Inflationary monetary policies distort price
    signals, undermining a market economy.

17
Money, Money, Money!
  • Money is to an economy what language is to
    communication.
  • Money serves three functions
  • Medium of exchange
  • Unit of account
  • Store of value
  • When the value of money is stable,
  • Many potentially beneficial exchanges will take
    place.
  • Borrowers and lenders will face less uncertainty.
  • Gains from trade will be maximized.

18
Money and Who Controls It
  • The nations money consists of its currency held
    by the public, checking accounts, and travelers
    checks.
  • A nations central bank controls its money by
    buying and selling assets, usually government
    bonds.

19
The Value of Money
  • The value of money is determined by supply and
    demand.
  • The value of money is steady when the supply of
    money grows slowly (e.g. at approximately the
    same rate as goods and services).
  • When a central bank expands the money supply
    rapidly relative to the production of goods and
    services, inflation results and the purchasing
    power of money is eroded.

20
Inflations Uncertainty
  • How does inflation undermine prosperity by making
    investment projects riskier and thwarting
    savings?
  • Difficult to forge long-range plans when you
    cannot predict the value of money
  • How does inflation undermine the credibility of
    government?
  • Confidence in government declines when citizens
    lack confidence in the value of their nations
    currency.

21
The Keys to Sound Money and Price Stability
  • Central banks and their officials should be held
    accountable for following a sound money policy
    and keeping the nations rate of inflation within
    a narrow range or be dismissed.
  • A currency board in one nation could establish a
    fixed rate of exchange between its domestic
    currency and a selected foreign counterpart with
    a sound money policy. This is often attractive
    for small countries.
  • A country could adopt another nations currency
    to provide stability. For example, the euro or
    dollar are often used.

22
Source 6
  • Low Tax Rates
  • People will produce more when they are permitted
    to keep more of what they earn.

23
High Marginal Tax Rates
  • Discourage work effort and reduce the
    productivity of labor.
  • Reduce both the level and efficiency of capital
    formation.
  • Encourage individuals to consume tax-deductible
    goods when nondeductible goods may actually be
    more desirable.

24
Source 7
  • Free Trade
  • A nation progresses by selling goods and services
    that it can produce at a relatively low cost and
    buying those that would be costly to produce.

25
Increased Production and Consumption Among All
Trading Partners
  • International trade makes it possible for each
    country to acquire goods and services more
    cheaply.
  • It allows domestic producers and consumers to
    benefit from the economies of scale.
  • It promotes competition in domestic markets and
    allows consumers to purchase a wider variety of
    goods at lower prices.

26
Free Trade Allows
  • Consumers to find the lowest prices, the best
    value from their expenditures, and the greatest
    variety of goods and services.
  • Domestic producers to sell their goods and
    services where they can get the highest price for
    the value of what they offer in the marketplace.

27
Government Barriers to Trade
  • Include tariffs, domestic
  • subsidies, quotas, etc.
  • Do not create or destroy domestic jobs they just
    shuffle them around.
  • Create inefficiencies in the protected
    industries, forcing domestic consumers to pay
    higher prices.

28
International Trade Imports and Exports
  • Trade restrictions that reduce imports will also
    reduce the ability of foreigners to buy our
    exports.
  • Quotas and tariffs decrease the number of dollars
    earned by foreigners through the sale of imports
    to us.
  • Therefore, reductions in imports simultaneously
    reduce exports.

29
Explain why you agree or disagree.
  • More than any other single action, unilateral
    removal of our trade restrictions would establish
    the environment for a more peaceful and
    prosperous world. CSE

30
Concluding Thoughts
  • How important are the following
    institutions/policies for a countrys prosperity?
  • Secure protection of privately owned property
  • Even-handed enforcement of contracts
  • Stable monetary environment
  • Low marginal tax rates
  • Minimal barriers to trade
  • Market versus government allocation of capital

31
The Evidence Indicates
  • The countries with the highest levels of economic
    freedom have the highest per capita GDP and
    growth rates.
  • The institutions and policies outlined in Part
    III of CSE produce results. Free economies spur
    savings and investment resulting in economic
    growth and prosperity.
  • Differing institutions and policies explain why
    growth rates vary across countries and time.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com